GO! INSIDE SPORTS A6 OREGON A5 Festivals celebrate cherries, melons Seahawks breaking in new linemen Hail damages crops in Union County IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • BUSINESS & AG LIFE • SPORTS Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 2022 • $1.50 QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber Drazan brings campaign to Baker A special good day to Herald subscriber John Tabor Clarke of Baker City. She hopes to become first GOP candidate elected governor since 1982 BRIEFING ————— Six more batches of mosquitoes positive for West Nile virus Six more batches of mosqui- toes, all trapped in the Keating Valley about 15 miles east of Baker City, tested positive for West Nile virus. Each group of mosquitoes generally consists of about 10 to 50 insects, said Matt Hutchinson, manager of the Baker Valley Vector Control Dis- trict. The six recent positive tests brings to nine the total number of mosquito “pools” that have test- ed positive for the virus since late July. All nine were trapped in the Keating Valley. There have been no cases of infection in people. Mosquitoes can infect people with the virus, which causes no symptoms in many people and minor illness in some, but can in rare cases cause lasting neurological problems or prove fatal. Hutchinson recommends residents take precautions against mosquitoes, including eliminating sources of standing water where the insects breed, wearing long-sleeved shirts and pants, and using insect repellant. Mental Health, Alcohol Drug committees to meet Aug. 23 The Baker County Local Alcohol Drug Planning Commit- tee and Mental Health Advisory Council Joint Committee will meet Aug. 23 from noon to 1:30 p.m. at New Directions Northwest, 3425 13th St. voting. “I need you guys to know this: your votes matter,” Dra- zan said. “Your votes are going to make a difference this year. Every single vote this year is going to make a difference. The next gover- nor of Oregon is not going to be elected by Multnomah County.” Multnomah County, which includes Portland, has about 560,000 registered voters out of almost 3 mil- BY CLAYTON FRANKE cfranke@bakercityherald.com Christine Drazan, who hopes to become the first Republican elected as Or- egon governor in 40 years, visited the Baker County Events Center Tuesday eve- ning, Aug. 16 for a speech to about 120 people. In closing her 25-minute speech to the audience, a group she described as “the winning team,” Drazan em- phasized the importance of lion registered in the state. the crowd on Tuesday night And more than half of put it. those voters are reg- That person also istered Democrats, a asked Drazan about big reason why Or- the possibility of egon has not elected Eastern Oregon be- a Republican to the coming a part of state’s top office Idaho, an idea the since Victor Atiyeh, Move Oregon’s Bor- who won his second der group has pro- four-year term in Drazan moted. 1982. Drazan had said That’s led people in coun- earlier in her speech that ties like Baker, where 47% of she had been working with the 12,800 registered voters Idaho Gov. Brad Little, also a are Republicans, to feel “un- Republican, and that she saw comfortable” with represen- an “incredible” opportunity tation, as one question from for collaboration between the states. “We were having a conver- sation about what it would be like to have a partner, where we could work to- gether on transportation, on infrastructure, on agricul- ture issues,” Drazan said. But she said voters should focus on fixing issues in Or- egon even if they feel disen- franchised with the state’s politics. “I want to fix Oregon, and I want you guys to be a part of your home state,” Drazan said. See Drazan / A5 Lookout Mountain wolves injure calf BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Elena Maddy, left, and Chris Bradford are actor/directors with Missoula Children’s Theatre. This week they brought “The Little Mermaid” to Baker City. Performances will be at 6 p.m. Friday and 3 p.m. Saturday at Baker High School. Taking a WEATHER ————— show road on the Today 97/57 Mostly sunny Performance Schedule Friday 92/54 Local youth actors will perform “The Little Mer- maid” twice this weekend. • Friday, Aug. 19, 6 p.m. • Saturday, Aug. 20, 3 p.m. Both performances will be in the auditorium at Baker High School, 2500 E St. Admission is $5, or free for ages 12 and younger who come with a paid adult. Mostly sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Missoula Children’s Theatre returns to Baker City this week BY LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com Chris Bradford didn’t intend to be an actor. Elena Maddy didn’t intend to be traveling with Missoula Children’s Theatre. But circumstances they didn’t fore- see has led them both, from opposite sides of the country, to be on a stage in Baker City while working for MCT. “Sort of an accident,” Bradford says with a laugh as he tells his tale of the- ater. He grew up in Bakersfield, Califor- nia. When he was a freshman in high school, he decided to see a show. “I showed up super early — two hours early,” he said. The theater director asked if he could sing. “Next thing I know, I’m audition- ing for ‘The Little Shop of Horrors,’ ” he said. Bradford graduated from Grand Canyon University in Phoenix in 2021 with a degree in theater and drama. This is his first year touring with MCT. “You learn a lot from teaching kids,” he said. “It’s been a real growth experi- ence for me.” “You learn to adapt,” Maddy added with a smile. See Theatre / A3 County deems section of Pine Cr. Rd. as public BY SAMANTHA O’CONNER AND JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald The Baker County Board of Commissioners voted 3-0 on Wednesday morning, Aug. 17, to approve a reso- lution designating a section of Pine Creek Road, which is the subject of two current civil lawsuits, as a county road open to the public. Commissioners approved the resolution after a brief public hearing at the Court- house. There was applause and TODAY Issue 42 34 pages cheering from the audience of about 20, which included several people who live in the Pine Creek area. Some of those residents urged commissioners, during an April 19 public hearing, to take action to ensure the public can travel the road. The resolution states, in part, that “all private gates, structures, and obstructions” on the section of road sur- veyed last year “are hereby ordered to be removed.” Commissioner Mark Business .....................B1-B3 Classified ....................B3-B6 Comics ..............................B7 Bennett emphasized that although commissioners’ vote was “certainly a step forward,” the process under state law includes a 60-day appeal period. Bennett said he wants res- idents to understand that the gate that property owner David McCarty installed in 2020 won’t be unlocked or removed immediately, and he cautioned people to avoid taking any action on their own. Bennett said he didn’t Community News.............A2 Crossword ...............B3 & B5 Dear Abby .........................B8 See Pine Creek / A2 Wolves from the Lookout Mountain pack injured a calf in a private pasture northeast of Durkee about two weeks ago. A biologist from the Ore- gon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) confirmed that wolves had wounded the 5-month-old, 500-pound calf, according to an ODFW report released Tuesday, Aug. 16. The rancher who owns the calf found the injured animal on Monday, Aug. 15 in the Little Lookout Moun- tain area. An ODFW biologist who examined the calf found more than 50 bite scrapes, measuring up to 3 inches long and a quarter-inch wide, on the calf ’s left and right hind legs above the hocks. The bite scrapes were at the edges of a 4-inch by 4-inch open wound that was up to 2 inches deep, according to the report. The biologist estimated the calf had been attacked 10 to 14 days earlier. “The severity, size, and lo- cations of these wounds are consistent with injuries to cattle attacked by wolves,” the report states. “This depredation is at- tributed to wolves of the Lookout Mountain pack.” In 2021, after wolves from that pack killed at least nine head of cattle and injured three others, ODFW employ- ees killed eight of the esti- mated 11 wolves in the pack. See Wolves / A3 Chilly spring gave way to persistent heat BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Remember the cool spring that persisted right up to the solstice? The chilly mornings and the brisk afternoon winds and the frequent showers of rain that well into May occasionally thickened into snow, fragments of winter carried along like flot- sam in a stream? Probably you don’t remem- ber those strange days, at least not with great clarity. The weather pattern in the second week of July didn’t so much shift, which suggests a modest change, as it lurched, Horoscope ..............B4 & B5 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Opinion .............................A4 Senior Menus ...................A2 Sports ...............................A6 like an airplane that plummets when it hits a patch of turbulent air, spilling noncomplimentary drinks over passengers’ laps. Since then the heat has rarely relented, and even then it re- ceded only slightly. And briefly. After more than a month of stifling weather, the spring might seem as distant and as indistinct as the last time you shoveled snow. Indeed this summer, which started so unlike its record-set- ting predecessor, has turned into a season with rather a lot in common with the 2021 version. See Heat / A3 Sudoku..............................B7 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B8